Attractions

Explore the Forest for free!

The Royal Forest of Dean is home to a surprising array of free activities; more than enough to fill a short break and many within just a few miles of Parkend.
Below are some ideas for your stay. Access to all these sites is completely free, but a few do charge for car parking. In most cases it is possible to park nearby for free, or better still, why not walk or cycle to them!

Go cycling.

Cannop Cycle Centre offers a range of cycling opportunities to suit all abilities. Behind the centre are downhill tracks and way-marked single track trails for experienced mountain bikers, while across the road is a well marked ‘family cycle trail’ which follows wide, and mainly level, forest tracks.

Use of the trails is completely free. There is a charge for car parking, but at just 3 miles from Parkend, it can be easily reached by bike, via a spur off the Family Cycle Trail.

And, of course, cycling is also the perfect way to explore the area. There are miles of gravelled fire-roads criss-crossing the Forest; so you can get almost anywhere by bike.

Go feed the ducks!

Cannop Ponds is often described by visitors as one of the prettiest places in the Forest. The two ponds are a haven for waterfowl, including a pair of nesting mute-swans - so remember to bring something to feed them with. Parking here is free.

Explore the Forest’s industrial heritage.

Visitors to the Forest of Dean, two hundred years ago, would have been met by a very different scene to that of today. The area is home to both huge iron-ore and coal reserves, and although peaceful now, many of the villages here grew up around large mines or ironworks.

Parkend Iron works

Demolished in 1908, but its tall and majestic engine house has survived and remains one of the village’s most impressive structures.

Darkhill iron works

Just two miles to the west of Parkend you’ll also find the remains of Darkhill Ironworks. Built by David Mushet and now designated an ‘Industrial Archaeological Site of International Importance’. It was here that steel for the first steel railway lines was made, and where the first commercial steel alloys were produced. Parking here is free.

Go bird spotting.

Parkend has several areas of significant interest to bird-spotters, offering some of the best opportunities for localised bird watching in the Forest of Dean.

RSPB Nagshead

A quiet and tranquil reserve, located on the western edge of the village. Facilities include a visitor centre (open from 10am to 5pm at weekends during the summer), two viewing hides and two way-marked walks. This is a lovely spot to visit even if you’re not a bird-spotter. Car parking and use of the hides is completely free.
As it passes through the village, Cannop Brook also offers several opportunities to spot the elusive ‘Dipper’. One of the best locations is the shaded section, running behind the Fountain Lodge, next to the Fountain Inn.

Blaize Bailey

Special events.

Consider timing your visit to coincide with one of the great free festivals or events that we have here in the Forest. Parkend Carnival is one of the biggest and best in the Forest of Dean, and falls on the last bank holiday Monday in August.

Please check the Tourist Information website to confirm dates for all festivals.

Or, book your stay with us over New Year’s Eve and take advantage of our very own free celebrations. We also host an acoustic music festival in the summer – check with us for dates.

Even more free stuff.

Book your stay during the first three weeks in May and you can enjoy the spectacular display of Bluebells that appears in the Forest.

Or come and experience the Severn Bore – described as ‘one of Britain's few truly spectacular natural phenomena’. There are normally 6 or 7 big bores each year; please check the Severn Bore website for dates.

If you have your own canoe, you can even ride the bore! You can also take advantage of free access onto the River Wye, at Lower Lydbrook.

Other scenic areas in the Forest, which you may like to visit, include Soudley Ponds are a pair of large ponds, which can be incorporated into a walk up to Blaize Bailey viewpoint. Woorgreens Lake is an isolated nature reserve, famed as a dragonfly site – of which seventeen species are recorded.

Several other sites of historical interest, with free public access, also exist in the Forest. Parkend steam railway station, just across the road from the Fountain Inn, is a beautifully preserved station built by the ‘Severn and Wye Railway Company’ in 1875. Whitecliff Ironworks, in Coleford, are the remains of an 18th century blast furnace. And Devil’s chapel, near Bream, is a breathtaking and almost unique example of Roman opencast iron-ore workings. Please note that, whilst open to the public, the site is notorious for its steep drops and loose rocks, making it unsuitable to visit with children.

Payed Attractions

There is also a large number of attractions which you can pay for. They are listed here